Hi Ethan, Maybe you can organize a competition about interesting and useful ideas related to these matters. You can also offer one or more prizes for the winner(s). However, in order to participate in such a competition/lottery, one of the requirements should be to notify others about it. This can be done by requesting to publish it on Facebook or tweeter, to give at least two valid email addresses of other people, etc.
I did not come up with this idea myself, but it just happened that today I registered myself for participating in this lottery: http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/makeuseof-giving-ipad-2-again/ Then the collected ideas can be registered in some kind of idea database, for further discussing, elaborating and evaluating, like this one: http://www.creativitypool.com/free_ideas.php IdeaTorrent can be used as well: http://www.ideatorrent.org/ Maybe there are any other sites or tools for registering ideas, discussing, promoting them and fostering innovation. If you think and discuss about these further, maybe you can work out all the details and come up with a nice and polished action plan. Regards, Dashamir On 04/17/2011 08:22 PM, Mr. Puneet Kishor wrote: > see below --Puneet. > > > ---------- Forwarded message ---------- > From: <[email protected]> > Date: Tue, Apr 12, 2011 at 1:34 PM > Subject: Encouraging the use of environmental data > To: [email protected], "[email protected]" > <[email protected]> > > > The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is trying to encourage software > developers to use its data to make useful applications about the > environment and human health. I'm wondering how we could apply social > marketing techniques to encourage developers to use our data in this > way. > > A little background: The Open Government Initiative encourages federal > agencies to make data more accessible so it can be used in innovative > and helpful ways. EPA makes a lot of its data accessible (see EPA Data > Finder www.epa.gov/data and Data.gov and Data.gov > http://search.usa.gov/search?query=epa&affiliate=datagov&x=0&y=0), but > many developers don't even know it exists. They also don’t know that > agencies encourage this kind of activity. Luckily, the developers I’ve > spoken with are altruistic and are looking for ways to use their skills > to make a difference. > > Other agencies, like the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, > have made their data available and done a great job of building > awareness about their data (see the Community Health Data Initiative > http://www.hhs.gov/open/datasets/initiative_launch.html and the Health > Data Community http://www.data.gov/health). The U.S. Department of > Agriculture sponsored a challenge called Apps for Healthy Kids ( > www.appsforhealthykids.gov ) that encouraged developers to make apps to > keep kids healthy. > > How could EPA reach software developers and the people who would use > these applications? You can respond to the listserv or to me directly. > > Thanks, > Ethan > > Ethan McMahon || Office of Environmental Information || US EPA || > 202-566-0359 > Try EPA's Data Finder at www.epa.gov/data > See EPA's 2008 Report on the Environment in 40 pages at > http://oaspub.epa.gov/hd/home > > _______________________________________________ > okfn-discuss mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.okfn.org/mailman/listinfo/okfn-discuss -- Dashamir Hoxha GPG: 4F97 4EDE C739 4C3D 361E 16D3 FD06 AA8E 55D5 9B28 In God we trust. Everybody else we verify using GnuPG!
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